Wanda English Burnett
Editor
Have you ever been up-close and personal with a baby zebra? Now
is your chance to do so as a local woman invites anyone to see
her newest baby - a grant (type of zebra) on her farm near Cross
Plains.
The baby zebra was a month old on Sunday, May 15 and still doesnt
have a name. Michelle Leons, owner of the zebra, has decided to
offer school children from grades K-12 the opportunity of naming
him.

All you have to do is put the name you have chosen on a piece
of paper and mail it to: PO Box 158 Zebra, Versailles, IN 47042
or drop it off at the newspaper office at 115 S. Washington Street,
Versailles.

Leons is also offering the unique opportunity for people to see
the zebra at her farm located at 1076 E County Road 900 S (turn
west at Otters Grocery in Cross Plains off SR 129). You
can drop off the name entries there as well.

Times open to see the baby zebra are May 18, 19 and 20 from 4-6
p.m. and Sunday, May 22 from noon until 6 p.m.

The deadline for entering the naming contest is May 24. The winner
or winners (there could be two) will be notified and have their
picture taken for the local newspaper.

Leons is no stranger to raising animals. She has 13 horses on
her property now. I started riding when I was two or three
years old, she told the Osgood Journal. She bought her first
horse with her own money when she was just 17.

Why buy a zebra? Leons said she has always wanted some type of
wild exotic animal. She really wanted an elephant, but considering
the feed they might take, decided against that move. She had never
really thought about a zebra.

That was five weeks ago. She began looking at zebras on the Internet,
and found a ranch in Louisiana. She saw the exquisite zebra -
whose sister has already been signed onto Paramount Pictures to
do a story about a guy who won the lottery and bought a zebra,
according to Leons. She said when she saw the zebra, she knew
she had to have him.

Leons plans to breed her newest acquisition with her horses to
create zorses. They are not new, but new to her farm. She said
compared to money she has paid for good stud horses, the zebra
was cheap.
She researched the USDA licensing regulations and found she could
purchase him with no special license. I would only a need
breeders license if I was breeding him with a zebra, she
noted. But, because she has plans to only breed him with horses,
shes okay.

Leons also did a lot of research to find out what the best feed
would be for her new baby. She has him on a milk mixture of 22%
protein.

She has broke several horses to ride in her lifetime and knows
the technique of calming the zebra when he gets a little jumpy.
He now will nuzzle her and with every new person or animal he
encounters, he becomes more adapted to his new surroundings.

I just thought it would be good if kids could come and see
him and touch him, Leons noted. She said, After all,
its not everyday you get a see a zebra close-up. While
some might think his fur is coarse like a horse, its really
soft.

About the naming contest, Leons said, I was having a hard
time coming up with a name and decided to open it up to school-age
kids.

While Leonss children are grown, she still has kids in the
house, shes a foster mom to three right now.

Leons, who is a certified wildlife rehabilitator, says shes
looking forward to this new adventure and invites the community
to stop in from time to time and watch the zebra as he grows up.

WANDA
ENGLISH BURNETT PHOTO The newest baby on the farm still needs
a name. Pictured above is a baby zebra who is now living
on a Cross Plains farm. He was just getting to know two
of the 13 horses on the property that is now his home. Read
the story to find out how you can be part of naming him.